The FBI wants Apple to unlock the iPhone of Syed Rizwan Farook who killed 14 people in December last year.
Apple has resisted the demand saying the FBI order was “dangerous” and “unprecedented”.
Speaking to the Financial Times, the Microsoft founder said complying would not put a backdoor in all iPhones.
“This
is a specific case where the government is asking for access to
information,” he said in the interview. “They are not asking for some
general thing, they are asking for a particular case.”
Mr Gates said the case was similar to the requests regularly made to phone companies and banks for information.
In
a separate interview with the BBC, Mr Gates reiterated his view that
the issue came down to a debate about whether governments can get at
data they use to protect citizens.
“Should governments be able
to access information at all or should they be blind, that’s
essentially what we are talking about,” he told the BBC.
Microsoft
itself has not formally commented on the row between the FBI and Apple.
However, when pushed on the issue Microsoft referred to a statement
issued by the Reform Government Surveillance group of which it is a
member.
That statement sides with Apple saying: “Technology
companies should not be required to build in backdoors to the
technologies that keep their users’ information secure.”
It
emerged this week that the US Department of Justice is asking for
Apple’s help to get at data on iPhones relevant to more than a dozen
separate investigations. The Wall Street Journal said the cases came
from several different criminal investigations and data locked on the
handsets would help law enforcement.
None
of the cases is believed to be related to terrorism and many involved
older iPhones that lack the stronger security protections found on newer
devices.
Majority call
Facebook boss Mark Zuckerberg said he was “sympathetic” to Apple’s reasons for refusing to comply
More recently, Facebook boss Mark Zuckerberg said he was “sympathetic” to Apple’s stance in the row.
The
attack in San Bernadino by Syed Rizwan Farook and his wife Tashfeen
Malik in December last year left 14 people dead and 22 injured.
In
a statement published on Sunday, FBI director James Comey said its
demand for access to the data on the phone was “about the victims and
justice”.
Slightly more than half of all Americans, 51%, when
asked whether Apple should unlock the phone, believe it should comply
with the FBI’s order, according to a survey carried out by the Pew
Research Center. Of those questioned, 38% said Apple should resist the
call and 11% had no opinion.
On Monday, Apple boss Tim Cook
sent a letter to the firm’s employees about the row saying its refusal
was about a broader civil rights issue not just this one case.
It
also called for the US government to set up a government panel on
encryption to look into the ways law enforcement can ask for access to
data.
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